CBE Seminar: Water Structure and the Design of Water-Mediated Solute-Surface Interactions

ISEB 1200
Scott Shell, Ph.D.

Professor and Department Vice Chair 
Chemical Engineering 
UC Santa Barbara

Abstract: Water-mediated interactions constitute fundamental driving forces in a profound range of synthetic and natural materials.  Decades of work has thought about how these interactions are influenced, or even controlled, by the manner in which water structures and dynamically responds near solutes and surfaces. Here, we use molecular simulations and theory to address a related but distinct question: How can solutes and surfaces be engineered to program water structure in predictable ways that manipulate the functional behavior of materials? We analyze a wide range of simulated systems and use statistical feature selection to identify metrics for water structure that are predictive of functional properties, and to quantify how many measures of water structure are independent and relevant. We then develop an optimization workflow coupling molecular simulations to machine-learning algorithms that systematically designs complex aqueous interfaces to manipulate water structure and effect new material properties, such as solute binding and selectivity in transport through porous materials. These computational efforts identify novel ways to leverage water’s distinct responses to hydrophobic, hydrophilic and charged surface groups to chemically organize high-performing surfaces, and suggest new synthetic targets for experimental materials design.

Bio: Scott Shell is the Myers Founders chair professor and graduate vice chair of Chemical Engineering at the UC Santa Barbara. He earned his B.S. in chemical engineering at Carnegie Mellon in 2000 and his Ph.D. in chemical engineering from Princeton in 2005, followed by a postdoc in the Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry at UC San Francisco from 2005-07.  Shell’s group develops novel molecular simulation, multiscale modeling and statistical thermodynamic approaches to address problems in contemporary soft condensed matter and biophysics. Recent areas of interest include protein self-assembly and aggregation, water structure and water-mediated interactions, membrane design and complex polymer formulations. He is the recipient of a Dreyfus Foundation New Faculty Award (2007), an NSF CAREER Award (2009), a Hellman Family Faculty Fellowship (2010), a Northrop-Grumman Teaching Award (2011), a Sloan Research Fellowship (2012), a UCSB Academic Senate Distinguished Teaching Award (2014), the CoMSEF Impact Award from AIChE (2017) and a UCSB Academic Senate Graduate Mentor Award (2022).

Host: Ryan Hayes